A six-year-long neighborhood feud boils over in Dardenne Prairie

On the afternoon of June 24, 2009, Jerry Andres burst into Dardenne Prairie's city hall and demanded to see the mayor. He was 48 years old, a car mechanic with thick black-frame glasses, curly hair and oil-stained hands. The receptionist at the front desk later told police his demeanor was "very serious and angry."

Andres was informed that Mayor Pam Fogarty was unavailable. He clenched his fists. Witnesses said he was "trembling from his rage," and "his tone and volume escalated" as he described how Fogarty and the city harassed him and violated his privacy.

Then Andres said something that stopped city employees in their tracks. Accounts of the exact words he uttered differ greatly, but everyone agrees that he referred to the rampage at a Kirkwood City Council meeting in 2008 that left six dead and two wounded.

Jerry Andres was arrested for making threats at Dardenne Prairie City Hall that invoked the Kirkwood City Council rampage of 2008.

Andres reportedly said he sympathized with the gunman, Charles Lee "Cookie" Thornton, "a taxpayer who took matters into his own hands" after a prolonged dispute with the city. Andres stated that Kirkwood leaders publicly apologized for their conduct leading up the shooting and urged other communities to resolve their differences with disgruntled citizens to avert a similar tragedy.

"Andres explained that upon completion, Dardenne Prairie would be apologizing to the taxpayers after driving [him] to the point of violence," according to a report by the St. Charles County Sheriff's Department. "[The court clerk] advised that the matter would have to be settled in court. Andres exited the city hall."

Andres purchased his home on Nash Drive in Dardenne Meadows, a sleepy subdivision in suburban St. Charles County in 1999. For him, it was the ideal abode: four bedrooms, two baths and an expansive garage that allowed him to "fiddle with cars" and forget about the previous year's bitter divorce that left his ex-wife with custody of their two children.

Most neighbors welcomed the newcomer with open arms. His greasy coveralls were slightly out of place on a block where the homes sell for $200,000, but whenever there was car trouble, they called Andres.

"He'd do anything for you," recalls Debbie Puzniak, who lives five doors down from Andres. "When my daughter's car broke down, he brought us one of those portable battery-jumper things. He drove it home for her and fixed it that night. We tried to give him money, but he wouldn't take it."

Eventually Andres' garage work disturbed Tom Fisher, a retired army veteran with a gray flattop and mustache, who lives across the street. He says Andres parks wrecked vehicles in the street and operates machinery late at night. Fisher first confronted Andres in 2004.

"He was always nice. When I did some damage to my pickup truck I asked Jerry to take a look at it," Fisher recounts. "When it was just in his garage, I believed it was a hobby. But when he's got five or six cars out in the driveway, I got tired of it. I went to him like a man and asked him to stop. He didn't, and it's been getting worse and worse ever since."

Not everyone shares Fisher's concerns.

"I've had no issues with him whatsoever," says Seth Taylor, Andres' next-door neighbor. "He is one of the most friendly and helpful people in my subdivision. There may be some garage-type noises that come from his place, but it's not something that's just constant. And it's not any louder than a lawn mower."

Fisher complained to the subdivision's board of trustees, but nothing came of the matter until June 2008. It was then that Andres lost his job at a St. Charles body shop. To make ends meet, he began salvaging cars and selling them on Craigslist.

This time Fisher took his grievance to the mayor. Fogarty suggested he take pictures to document any wrongdoing.

"There's a lot of times when people will take pictures of whatever is going on and send them to city hall," Fogarty explains. "You know, 'Here's a dog that isn't being taken care of properly,' or a car that's been up on blocks for forever and a day.'"

On December 18, 2008, owing to Fisher's photographic evidence, Andres was fined $100, plus $59 in court costs, for operating a business without a license.

Undaunted, Andres continued to work in his garage. On March 25, 2009, he received two more citations, this time for $200 each. He requested a jury trial, represented himself, and was convicted in St. Charles County Municipal Court of the unlicensed business charge and violating Dardenne Prairie's zoning laws, which prohibit "operating any repair shop from a dwelling."

Defiant, Andres still refused to stop. Fisher, in turn, continued to snap pictures.

In April 2009 Andres distributed a letter to everyone in the subdivision. In it, he defended his right to buy and repair cars and accused Fisher of harassment and voyeurism. After handing out the message, Andres planted a sign in his front yard that read in bold black letters, "Tom Fisher is a stalker." He wrote those same words on the windows of a van parked in his driveway.

Fisher called police, and Andres was booked for harassment, a violation of his probation.

Two months later Andres noticed Fisher photographing a woman who had come to purchase a treadmill he had advertised online. Andres dialed 911 only to be told that Fisher was not breaking the law. Later that afternoon, he barged into city hall and referenced the Kirkwood shooting.